> On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 01:09:46PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:>> I'm the original author, and I selected the GPLv2 for Linux.> [...]>> I'm not going to bother discussing this any more. You don't seem to >> respect my right to choose the license for my own code.

> This is the main reason I dislike GPLwhatever: there is no notion> of "orginal author". You might have written 99% of the code, that> doesn't matter. You have no rights whatsoever once you release> something under the GPL (no more than ANYOne else).

You retain the copyright, and in particular the right to relicense.Only if you make the mistake of including the "or any later version"phrase do you allow others to redistribute the work under a differentversion of the GPL. Although this provision may seem slightlyconvenient to authors, its effect is to grant a very large amount ofrelicensing permission to the FSF. It almost certainly doesn't makesense to place that much trust in a single organization.

> The GPL is nice for the community, and for the users - but very,> very bad towards it's authors (taking all and every right you might> have). If John Doe wants to re-release the whole kernel under> GPLv3, then all he needs is a website and some bandwidth.

Well, he also needs one tiny little extra thing: the permission of everycopyright holder in Linux.